Frequently Asked Questions
Grace Care provides in-home dementia care for individuals living with all major forms of dementia including Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, frontotemporal dementia, mixed dementia, and other less common forms of cognitive impairment. Our care workers receive dementia-specific training that covers the different presentations, progression patterns, and care requirements associated with each type, ensuring care is appropriately tailored to the individual’s specific diagnosis and current stage.
Yes, and this is the primary focus of our dementia care service. Research consistently shows that familiar home environments are beneficial for people living with dementia, reducing disorientation, preserving functional independence for longer, and supporting emotional wellbeing. Grace Care’s in-home dementia care is specifically designed to make remaining at home safely possible for as long as the individual’s needs can be appropriately met in the home setting. We work with families to implement safety measures, adapt care as the condition progresses, and provide the level of support needed at each stage of the journey.
Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia such as agitation, wandering, sundowning, resistance to care, hallucinations, and repetitive behaviours are managed through a combination of person-centred approaches and evidence-based techniques. Our care workers are trained to identify triggers and early warning signs of distress, use calm and validated communication techniques, redirect rather than confront, implement meaningful activities that reduce anxiety and boredom, and maintain the consistent routines that provide predictability and security. Where behavioural symptoms are complex or escalating, we communicate proactively with the family and the person’s medical team to explore additional clinical support.
Consistency is one of the most therapeutically important elements of dementia care. Familiar faces, consistent routines, and predictable care patterns significantly reduce dementia-related anxiety and improve the person’s cooperation with and comfort during care. Grace Care addresses this by assigning the same care workers to each client wherever scheduling allows, maintaining consistent visit times, delivering care in the same sequence and using the same approaches each visit, and minimising worker changes wherever possible. When worker changes are unavoidable, we introduce new workers carefully and ensure they are thoroughly briefed on the person’s care plan, preferences, and history.
All Grace Care care workers providing dementia care complete dementia-specific training that covers the nature and progression of dementia, person-centred dementia care principles, communication strategies for different stages of cognitive impairment, management of behavioural and psychological symptoms, safety management including wandering prevention, nutrition and swallowing considerations in dementia, and end-of-life care principles. Workers also develop detailed knowledge of each individual client’s personal history, preferences, and care plan through our comprehensive life history and onboarding process. Ongoing professional development keeps our dementia care team current with evolving best practice in dementia care.
Family involvement and support is central to Grace Care’s dementia care approach because family carers are the backbone of in-home dementia care and their wellbeing directly affects the wellbeing of the person they love. We involve families fully in assessment, care planning, and review processes, treating them as expert partners in their loved one’s care. We provide regular, detailed communication about the person’s daily functioning, behaviour, and any changes or concerns. We offer carer relief through planned respite arrangements that give family carers genuine rest breaks. And we provide guidance and education to help family members understand dementia progression and support their loved one effectively between professional care visits.
Call us on 1300 069 338 or email info@grace-care.com.au to arrange a free dementia care consultation. We will have a sensitive, unhurried conversation with you and your family about your loved one’s dementia diagnosis, current care needs, home situation, and family circumstances. We will then develop a personalised dementia care plan and introduce the right care team. We understand that families seeking dementia care are often at a point of significant stress and uncertainty and we approach every first conversation with the empathy, patience, and clarity that this moment deserves. Please reach out as soon as you are ready and we will be here.